Shallow subsurface morphotectonics of the NW Sumatra subduction system using an integrated seismic imaging technique

dc.contributor.authorGhosal D.en_US
dc.contributor.authorSingh S.C.en_US
dc.contributor.authorMartin J.en_US
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-17T05:10:16Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.description.abstractIn subduction zones, shallow subsurface structures are the manifestation of the plate interactions at depth. However, significant water depths, rough bathymetry and presence of heavily deformed accretionary wedge materials hamper imaging of the near-surface features to a great extent using conventional imaging techniques. In this study, we show results using an integrated processing technique to a multichannel seismic data set acquired in 2006 from the northwestern offshore Sumatra. We start with first downward continuing the 12-km-long surface streamer data to the seafloor, followed by a high-resolution traveltime tomography of refracted phases to determine a detailed velocity-depth model of subsurface, which in turns, is used for pre-stack depth migration in order to delineate the shallow subsurface structures beneath the trench, subduction front and outer accretionary wedge. Our velocity-depth model and the depth migrated image depict variation of sediment properties across the front and structures of uppermost sedimentary sequence with an unprecedented high resolution providing the precise location of the frontal and conjugate thrusts, highly folded sedimentary sequences, which in turns describe their relationship with the top of the subducting plate and factors that control rupture propagation to the trench. Furthermore, we estimate the porosity distribution across the front, where we find a 12 and 18 per cent decrease in porosity beneath the deformation front and the inner accretionary plateau at 500m below the seafloor, respectively, which we interpret to be due to the compaction. A significant decrease in porosity at the plate interface below 5-6-km thick sediments near the deformation front would increase the coupling, leading to the rupture propagation up to the trench, uplifting 4.5 km water and producing large tsunami. � The Authors 2014. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society.en_US
dc.identifier.citation12en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://dx.doi.org/1093/gji/ggu182
dc.identifier.urihttps://idr.iitbbs.ac.in/handle/2008/612
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subjectContinental margins: convergenten_US
dc.subjectControlled source seismologyen_US
dc.subjectFolds and foldingen_US
dc.subjectSeismic tomographyen_US
dc.subjectSubduction zone processesen_US
dc.titleShallow subsurface morphotectonics of the NW Sumatra subduction system using an integrated seismic imaging techniqueen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US

Files